(Continued..)

That plan B is called Gitee and it is run by Open Source China (OSChina), which 
calls itself the largest open source community in the country.

In July, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) chose 
7-year-old Gitee to construct an independent, open-source code hosting platform 
for China, the company said last week.

“Borderless collaboration is one key characteristic of open source, however the 
geopolitical friction is forcing China to consider alternatives for sustainable 
tech-driven innovation,” said Charlie Dai, analyst at research firm Forrester.

(Gitee was selected to build an independent, open-source code hosting platform 
for China with the help of 10 organisations including Huawei.)

Concerns about the US cutting off China from GitHub’s trove of software began 
to emerge last year.

Websites like GitHub allow free access to open source projects for almost 
anyone around the world to use as they see fit. In a survey among 950 global IT 
leaders, conducted by enterprise open source software company Red Hat, 95 per 
cent said open source was strategically important for them.

The cut-off fears began when the Chinese developer community found that content 
developed on GitHub needs to comply with US export laws, including the Export 
Administration Regulations (EAR) – the same regulations used to restrict 
exports to Huawei and affiliated companies. GitHub already restricts some 
countries from accessing its Enterprise Server, including Iran and North Korea, 
both under US trade sanctions.

GitHub tried to allay some of the fears in May last year, saying that the 
provision of software services over the internet, such as the code 
collaboration in repositories on GitHub.com, is not subject to US export 
control mandates.

But this has not stopped China from trying to transform Gitee into a backup 
solution. The question some developers are asking is whether the plan B will 
work.

With 5 million users and 10 million projects, Gitee claims to be the 
second-largest code hosting platform in the world.

GitHub however, now has 40 million users and 44 million projects. It also 
offers access to software from leading developers and tech companies around the 
world. The biggest challenge for Gitee will be upgrading the quality of its 
repositories, said Dai.

“Most of the leading open source projects, spanning all technology domains, 
such as cloud-native, AI, IoT and blockchain, are hosted on GitHub,” he 
explained.

(China is the second largest source of GitHub’s contributors, according to 
owner Microsoft.)

GitHub itself seems to have no intention of giving up on China. The company’s 
chief operating officer Erica Brescia said in an interview with the Financial 
Times last year that GitHub is still planning to establish a joint venture 
capable of hosting its content in China.

And Chinese developers like GitHub too: China is now the second-largest source 
of GitHub contributors and users.

Since last year the number of registered users has increased 37 per cent, 
according to Stephen Walli, principal program manager at Microsoft.

Gitee’s operator OSChina did not reply to our questions about the company’s 
plans and the issues that China’s software industry might face, saying only 
that it wants to focus on upgrading its product.

Before its new role in building China’s independent open source hosting 
platform, the company said that it does not consider the two platforms an 
either-or choice. Local developers may have their own special needs for open 
source software and may prefer to use Chinese language in their work. This is 
where Gitee can help, it said.

In an interview last year with the South China Morning Post, however, OSChina 
director of operations Liu Chen acknowledged that the uncertainty of Sino-US 
relations is pushing the country’s software development towards greater 
autonomy.

“Once national interests are involved, original agreements or conditions may be 
repealed or changed,” Chen said.

Gitee will not be alone though when it comes to the wider effort to build up 
China’s open source strengths.

Aside from government support, the platform will be aided by a group of 10 
organisations including Huawei, which is a member of several open source 
foundations including Linux and Apache. Last year, the Chinese telecoms giant 
said it plans to help set up China's first open-source software foundation.

Ref: 
https://www.scmp.com/abacus/tech/article/3099107/china-pins-its-hopes-gitee-open-source-alternative-microsofts-github


_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to